VIDEO: Voter Turnout

BOSTON – Voter turnout was strong in Massachusetts with the hottest Senate race in the country, but weaker nationally where preliminary numbers suggest a drop from 2008 and possibly even 2004 records.

BU News Service reporter Erica Stapleton spoke with voters and officials about the turnout at Boston polling places.

VIDEO: Another Kennedy in Congress

MASSACHUSETTS – Democrat Joe Kennedy the Third will be filling the Congressional seat left vacant by the retiring Barney Frank.

The young Kennedy won a decisive victory over Republican challenger Sean Bielat. BU News Service’s Mike Neff took a look at the race for the Fourth District.

VIDEO: Tierney Wins

MASSACHUSETTS – Incumbent John Tierney is the winner of a Congressional race shadowed by scandal. The margin of victory – just a few thousand votes between the Democrat and Republican challenger Richard Tisei.

Tisei’s campaign officials say they will be looking more closely at voter returns. BU News Service reporter Alex Orr has the story of Tierney’s rocky road back to Washington.

VIDEO: The Next Four Years

BOSTON – BU’s College of Communication Dean Tom Fiedler predicts a different type of presidency next term. Shortly after Barack Obama won the race election night, Dean Fiedler spoke to BU News Service anchor Matt Reed during the live-streamed, BU-TV’s election night special, Decision 2012.

VIDEO: Scott Brown is Defeated

BOSTON – Incumbent Senator Scott Brown lost a key Republican seat in the U.S. Senate won by Democrat Elizabeth Warren.

Brown admitted defeat, but supporters say this is not the last time we will see Brown on the political stage. BU News Service reporter Lindsey Reese has the story.

VIDEO: Romney Concedes

BOSTON – After a grueling presidential campaign, GOP candidate Mitt Romney conceded defeat at his election night headquarters in his home state of Massachusetts.

BU News Service’s Justin Bourke reports from his headquarters at the Boston Convention and Expo Center, where reporters from all over the world came to cover the end of a presidential campaign that began here in New England.

VIDEO: Obama and Warren Win

BOSTON — Democrats celebrate election night wins for President Barack Obama and Senator-elect Elizabeth Warren, soon to be the first female Senator from Massachusetts.

BU News Service reporter Kelsey Cote captured the celebration at Elizabeth Warren’s election night headquarters in downtown Boston.

Brookline Polls Manned by Nine High School Students

By Caroline Hatano
BU News Service

BOSTON—The two teenage poll workers at Brookline’s Town Hall are similar to the typical Massachusetts voter in that they’re rooting for Obama and Warren. They differ, however, since while they’re passionately involved, they’re also ineligible to vote.

Ilana Curtis and Elizabeth Doyle, 16-year-old juniors at Brookline High School, said that they volunteered to be poll workers because they were curious about the whole process of voting. “My sister did it for the last Presidential election and she said it was really interesting,” Curtis said. There are nine student volunteers this year.

This election marks the second Presidential contest in which Brookline high school students have been allowed to volunteer at the polls, thanks to Massachusetts’s “Student Election Assistant Statute,” which allows 16- and 17-year-olds to volunteer with the permission of their parents and school.

Curtis and Doyle both said that they watched the debates and try to keep up with politics. “When I was younger my parents influenced me, but now that I’m older I’m starting to watch the news and to have my own opinions,” Curtis said.

Britt Braudo, who at 24 looks little older than Curtis and Doyle, started as a volunteer when she was 18, before the Student Assistant Statute was passed. This year is her second as a poll worker for a Presidential election. She said that helping out is a rewarding way to get involved, and that she regretted not having the opportunity to volunteer in a state and local election when she was in high school.

“When I was under 18 I didn’t know anything about what was going on, and once I was 18 I didn’t know what I was doing,” she said with a wry smile. “I would have loved to have had the opportunity to do it.”

Assistant Town Clerk Linda Golburgh said that organizing the students takes a little extra effort, but in the end it’s worth it. She coordinated with the League of Women Voters of Brookline to find and assign the nine high school students to precincts.

“They’re young, they’re bright, they’re vibrant, they’re eager to volunteer,” she said. “And that means they’re eager to participate in some kind of government activity.”

Golburgh, who has worked in the Town Clerk’s office for 18 years, said that having teenage workers around is a win-win for both the older and younger poll workers. “They do everything that a regular poll worker does, and they get to see behind the scenes,” she explained.

According to Golburgh, the high school students learn a few important lessons—one being that you can’t run an election without poll workers, and another that voters take the act of casting their ballot very seriously.

“The least that I hope comes out of this is that they always remember to vote,” she said. “If I could know that, I would be thrilled.”